April 26 – NIU Concert Choir and University Chorus

April 26 – NIU Concert Choir and University Chorus

Concert Program

Large Ensemble Concert Series

NIU Choral Concert

NIU Concert Choir
NIU University Chorus

Eric Johnson, director, NIU Concert Choir
Mary Lynn Doherty, director, University Chorus

April 26, 2026  
3 p.m.
Boutell Memorial Concert Hall

 

 

Program

NIU Concert Choir

 
Mass in G Minor (1921) Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958)
          Kyrie  
Solo Quartet
Kyla Reisenbichler, Sondos Hassan, Gabriel Galindo, Eli Clark
          Gloria  
Solo Quartet
Maia Orlovsky, Kayti Miller, Serge Dulang, Gunner Magnuson
          Credo  
Solo Quartet
Kyla Reisenbichler, Jessica Holtz, Matthew Ellis, Eli Clark
          Sanctus/Benedictus  
Solo Quartet
Olivia Yedinak, Isabella Froh, Eduardo Garcia, Angel Morales
          Angus Dei  
Solo Quartet
Emily Kmetz, Kayti Miller, Joseph Quaynor, Gunner Magnuson
   

University Chorus

 
Earth Song Frank Ticheli (b. 1958)
Missa in Tempore Bella (Paukenmesse) Franz Joseph Haydn (1732-1809)
Mass in a Time of War
          II. Gloria in Excelsis Deo  
Three Madrigals Emma Lou Diemer (1927-2004)
          I. O Mistress Mine, Where are You Roaming?
II. Take, O Take Those Lips Away
III. Sigh No More Ladies, Sigh No More
 
O Saya A.H. Rahman (b. 1967)
arr. Ethan Sperry
Chris Avila, Dave Houghton, and Morgan Tipton, percussion
   

NIU Concert Choir

 
Lay Your Head in the Window Jesus Jester Hairston (1901-2000)
Kayla Reisenbichler, Soprano
Ain’t Got Time to Die Hall Johnson (1888-1970)
Gunner Magnuson, Baritone
My God is a Rock Stacy V. Gibbs (b. 1962)
Trio 1 – Maggie Garner, Lyric Johnson, Chenoa Randolph
Trio 2 – Kayti Miller, Jessica Holtz, Sondos Hassan

Composer Bios

Ralph Vaughan Williams was born on 12 October 1872 in the Cotswold village of Down Ampney, where his father was vicar. Antecedents included the interconnected families of Wedgwood and Darwin. Following his father’s death in 1875 he was brought up at Leith Hill Place in Surrey and educated at Charterhouse School, the Royal College of Music and Trinity College, Cambridge. He was a pupil of Charles Stanford and Hubert Parry, later studying with Max Bruch in Berlin and Maurice Ravel in Paris.

At the turn of the century he was among the very first to travel into the countryside to collect folk songs and carols from singers, notating them for future generations to enjoy. As musical editor of The English Hymnal he composed several hymn tunes that remain popular (including Sine Nomine, “For all the Saints” and Down Ampney, “Come down O love Divine”). A long and deep friendship with Gustav Holst was a constructive relationship which was crucial to the development of both composers.

Vaughan Williams took three years off his age in order to volunteer for the army during the 1914-1918 war; after a long period of training and waiting he was sent to France in 1916, serving as a wagon orderly in the Royal Army Medical Corps. Later, he was given a commission in the Royal Garrison Artillery and found himself in charge of both guns and horses. The carnage and the loss of close friends such as the composer George Butterworth deeply affected him and influenced his music after the war.

Youthful atheism eventually settled down into cheerful agnosticism. He was widely read, and heavily influenced by poets and writers including Shakespeare, Bunyan, Blake and Walt Whitman.

Vaughan Williams was married twice: in 1897 to Adeline Fisher, and in 1953 to the poet Ursula Wood. A knighthood was offered and refused, but the Order of Merit was conferred upon him in 1935.

He died on 26 August 1958; his ashes are interred in Westminster Abbey, near Purcell. In a long and productive life, music flowed from his creative pen in profusion. Hardly a musical genre was untouched or failed to be enriched by his work, which included nine symphonies, concertos for piano, violin, oboe and tuba, five operas, chamber, ballet and film music, a large body of songs and song cycles, and various important unaccompanied and orchestral choral works. His orchestral works include such popular favorites as The Lark Ascending, Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis, Five Variants of Dives and Lazarus, The Wasps Overture and the English Folk Song Suite.

Ralph Vaughan Williams Society
https://www.rvwsociety.com/short-biography/

 

Jester Hairston  (1901-2000) worked as composer, arranger, singer, conductor, and actor. He is known primarily as one of a small number of African American composers whose work transformed African-American spirituals into an accepted genre of choral music.

Hairston was born July 1, 1901 in Bellows Creek, North Carolina, near the plantation where his grandparents had been slaves. Not long after his birth, the Hairston family moved to a steel mill town near Pittsburgh by the name of Homestead. Of this town, Hairston said, “There’s nothing to do there but work in steel mills. That’s the reason I got out of there as quickly as I could.” Hairston attended University of Massachusetts in Amherst on a two year church scholarship, but was unable to continue for lack of money. He began working and met Northampton schoolteacher, Laura Anna Kidder. She was so impressed with his musical talent that she was willing to pay for his education with her savings. He subsequently repaid her for her loan. Hairston had applied to Tufts University, which was know for its music department, and was turned down. After his rejection, Hairston ran into a friend in New York, who was also African-American and who had been admitted to Tufts for his athletic skills. This student advised Hairston to write a letter to the music department and to “lay it on thick!” Hairston followed his advice and auditioned for Leo R. Lewis, the head of the music department on Lewis’ front porch and was subsequently admitted. Hairston graduated from Tufts in 1929 and went on to study music theory at Julliard for two years.

After leaving Julliard, Hairston became the assistant director of the Hall Johnson Choir in New York and it was there that he developed his interest in African-American spirituals. For a short time he organized the African American ‘The Jester Hairston Singers,’ one of whose members was Margaret Isabel Swanigan who became his wife in 1939. In 1934/35 WPA hired him as assistant director of one of the largest music schools in New York City for African American children and adults. In 1935, the Hall Johnson Choir went to California to perform in the film, “Green Pastures.” The next year Hairston made his break as a composer in Hollywood with the film “Lost Horizons” and also performed with Shirley Temple and her choir. The Hall Johnson choir also performed with Irvin Cobb on the Paducah plantation radio program for the Oldsmobile people for 26 weeks which was sponsored by GM and canceled eventually due to GM’s prolonged difficulties with the famous sit down strikes in Michigan which invigorated the UAW. In 1937, the Hall Johnson choir gave a private concert for Stravinsky at Paramount studio after which Stravinsky planned to compose a group of choral works for the Hall Johnson Choir, mentioned in a contemporary letter by Hairston. Throughout the 1940s, he arranged choral music in over 40 films such as “Dual in the Sun,” “Friendly Persuasion,” and “Red River.” He became one of Hollywood’s most respected choral directors during this time period. When filmmakers stopped using large choral ensembles, Hairston performed as a character actor (often uncredited) in television and films, including “The Alamo,” “Carmen Jones: “Tarzan,” “To Kill a Mockingbird,” “So This is Love,” “Tanganyika” (an African movie), “Gypsy Colt,” “Tarzan’s Secret Jungle,” St. Louis Blues and “In the Heat of the Night,” “Lady Sings the Blues,” “I’m Gonna Git You Sucka,” “The Bingo Long Traveling All, Stars and Motor Kings,” “Tender Killing Care,” and “Being John Malkovich” . Hairston also portrayed Henry Van Porter and Leroy Smith in the controversial radio and television show “Amos ‘n Andy.” By 1951, he had also performed as Johnny in the Beulah Show and at Humphrey Bogart’s new radio show, Bold Venture, as a Cuban singer. The US government sent him and an integrated choir on a good will tour to Asia in the 1950s.

Most importantly, Hairston was a prolific composer. He is most famous for “Amen,” a spiritual so “authentic” many did not realize Hairston had composed it. The song was made famous through the film “Lilies of the Field;” Hairston performed the song, dubbing for lead actor, Sidney Poitier. In addition to composing film scores, Hairston composed or arranged more than 300 choral spirituals, including popular compositions such as “Elijah” and “Mary’s Little Boy Child.” Hairston, an expert in the history of African-American folk music and Negro spirituals, became one of the foremost interpreters, arrangers, and composers of this music, once stating ”I decided that I wanted to make my mark in folk songs because my grandparents were slaves […] I wanted to keep that music alive.”

Throughout the 1970s and 80s, Hairston was honored for his work across the US and he was frequently invited as guest conductor at high schools, colleges and church choirs. He also made several State Department sponsored goodwill tours to Africa, Asia, Europe and South America, once stating, “I will bring more love to China through American Negro folk songs than anything Kissinger can write.” Throughout his lifetime, Hairston broke down many racial barriers in the United States. He was, for instance, the first African-American to be invited to conduct in the Mormon Tabernacle choir. Occasionally criticized for taking film and television roles that stereotyped African-Americans, Hairston said, “We had a hard time fighting for dignity. We had no power. We had to take it, and because we took it, the young people today have opportunities.”

Tufts University Archives
https://exhibits.tufts.edu/spotlight/another-light/feature/jester-hairston

 

Hall Johnson (1888-1970) was one of a number of American composers and arrangers–including Harry T. Burleigh, R. Nathaniel Dett, and Eva Jessye – who elevated the African-American spiritual to an art form, comparable in its musical sophistication to the compositions of European Classical composers.

Johnson received an extensive education, which included a time at the Juilliard School. As a boy, he taught himself to play the violin after hearing a violin recital given by Joseph Henry Douglass, grandson of Frederick Douglass. He went on to play the violin and viola professionally, including in the orchestra for the 1921 musical, Shuffle Along.

In time, however, he became more interested in choral music, forming the Hall Johnson Negro Choir, the first of many choral ensembles, in 1925. Hall Johnson and his choir became renowned through their participation in the 1930 Broadway production of Marc Connelly’s The Green Pastures as well as in national and international tours of the play, radio versions, the 1936 film adaptation, and Hallmark Hall of Fame television broadcasts.

Johnson would also go on to arrange music for and conduct his choir in more than thirty feature-length Hollywood films, as well as a number of short films and cartoons. He wrote Run, Little Chillun, which premiered on Broadway in 1933 and was produced in San Francisco in 1939 under the auspices of the Federal Theater Project. Also in 1939, the Hall Johnson Choir was featured in the soundtrack of the Frank Capra film, Lost Horizon. In addition to his theatrical work, Johnson wrote the Easter cantata Son of Man, which premiered at New York’s City Center in 1946, the same year that the Hall Johnson Choir sang on Walt Disney’s Song of the South. In 1951, the Hall Johnson Choir was selected by the United States Department of State to represent the United States at the International Festival of Fine Arts held in Berlin, Germany.

Johnson was fluent in both German and French. Among the singers he coached were Marian Anderson, Robert McFerrin and Shirley Verrett. His arrangements of the spirituals have been recorded by some of the world’s finest artists. In 1975 he was posthumously honored for his work in films by being elected to the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame.

Philadelphia Chamber Music Society
https://www.pcmsconcerts.org/composer/hall-johnson/

 

Stacey V. Gibbs is a prolific and highly sought-after composer, arranger and clinician. Best known for arrangements of spirituals, he is highly acclaimed for his ability to infuse new energy into familiar works without sacrificing their authenticity or power.

Maestro Gibbs’ spirituals have been commissioned and performed by the King’s Singers of England, United States Air Force Sergeants, The St. Olaf Choir, the Stellenbosch Choir of South Africa, the University of Southern California Chamber Singers, The Princeton Glee Club, Morehouse & the University of Michigan Glee Clubs, the Wartburg Choir, The Nairobi Chamber Singers, Cantus, Chanticleer and many other college, university, high school and professional ensembles both domestically and internationally. His music has been programmed at all state festivals, National Association of Music Educators (MENC) Festivals, the World Choir Games and regional and national American Choral Directors Association (ACDA) Conventions.

He currently has over 200 published arrangements available for SATB, SSAA and TTBB voices. His music was featured at the 57th Inaugural Service for President Obama and family.

Maestro Gibbs’ made his conducting debut at Carnegie Hall in 2017. His medley of spirituals was performed by Choir of the World Winner Oakwood Aeolians and American Idol winner Reuben Studdard.

His arrangement of Go, Tell It on the Mountain, performed by True Accord, peaked at #5 on Billboard Classical and #1 on Amazon Classical Music in December 2019. In December 2020, his music was performed by the Mangate Ensemble and was broadcast on NBC Television in all major markets.

Mr. Gibbs serves as clinician (nationally and internationally) for university, high school, professional and church choral ensembles. A management professional with 20 years experience, Mr. Gibbs holds membership in ACDA and currently resides in Detroit, Michigan.

Santa Barbara Music Publishing
https://sbmp.com/ComposerPage.php?ComposerNum=279

Personnel

NIU Concert Choir 

Director: Eric A. Johnson, D.M.A.
Minjung Kim, Accompanist

Soprano Tenor Alto Bass
Kaylie Emmer
Maggie Garner
Lyric Johnson
Emily Kmetz
Maia Orlovsky
Chenoa Randolph
Kyla Reisenbichler
Willow Sabani
Thalila Sisou
Niya Teague
Olivia Yedinak

 

Rain Anzaldua
Amelia Arndt
Lexus Bovensiep
Isabella Froh
Sondos Hassan
Jessica Holtz
Kayti Miller
Katie Vidmar
Chloe Weeks
Serge Dulang
Matthew Ellis
Gabriel Galindo
Eduardo Garcia
Jacob Lawver
EmVi Legaspi
Joseph Quaynor
A.J. Villa
Bryn Callahan
Eli Clarke
Gunnar Magnuson
Angel Morales
Emerson Valyou
Nolan Valyou
Erik Vazquez

 

NIU University Chorus

Director: Mary Lynn Doherty, Ph.D.
Qingyun Zheng, Accompanist

Soprano Alto Tenor Bass
Emily Bauer
Jenessa Bowen
Vanessa Carol
Dani Godinez
Skyla Johnson
Hannah Jorgensen
Jocelyn Kuntz
Chloe McKendry
Lux Moone
Emelia Plewa
Sheridan Settipani
Brooke Sleigher
Anne Bishop
Ariceli Duran
Talia Grzelak
Isabella Jaimes
Alisa James
Ash Lehning
G Mayotte
Dulce Nepomuceno
Lily Owen
Gracie Raab
Caileen Szostak
Jayda Thompson
Jaylin Turner
Chris Avila
Reign Bonnewell
Phoenix Brosman
Bryn Callahan
Brayden Dulin
Vince Giunta
Gabe Greenfield
Alex Hager
Dave Houghton
Madelyn Montiel
Michael Powyszynski
Blake Wiles
Jonathan Alanis
Declan Carter
Andrew Clark
Colton Dean
Nathan Domecki
Brennyn Ford
Julian Hernandez
Brady Jobst
Wolfgang Jones
Sasha Marquez
Noah Reader
Lucas Smardo
Morgan Tipton
Frank Vyverberg
Everett Wright

 

Bios

Assistant Director of the School of Music
Associate Professor and Coordinator of Music Education

Mary Lynn Doherty is the assistant director of the School of Music and the coordinator of music education at Northern Illinois University, where she teaches choral and general music methods, supervises student teachers, works with undergraduate and graduate students as well as area music educators at all levels and conducts the University Chorus.

In 2020, Doherty was awarded the Outstanding Mentor Award from the Presidential Commission on the Status of Women. She has also been nominated for NIU’s Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching Award four times, representing the School of Music and the College of Visual and Performing Arts. Doherty has been invited to conduct ILMEA District choirs (elementary, middle and high school) eight times as well as serving as the conductor of the Rockford High School All-City Honor Choir, the Big Northern Conference Honor Choir, the Little Ten High School Choral Festival, the West Suburban Women’s Festival Choir, the North Central Junior Conference Honor Choir, the Women’s Honor Choir at the UW-Madison Summer Youth Music Camp and numerous district festival choirs.

Doherty was the director of NIU’s Community School of the Arts Children’s Choir from 2008-2016, earning grants from the National Endowment for the Arts to fund commissions and residences with internationally renowned composers and conductors. She is on the Illinois Comprehensive Musicianship through Performance Committee and serves as the NIU host of the Summer CMP Workshop. Prior to coming to NIU, she was the director of music education and associate conductor for the Choir Academy of the Chicago Children’s Choir.

Doherty’s research is on vocal health issues experienced by music teachers and she has presented her work both nationally and internationally as well as being published in The Choral Journal and the Journal of Voice. She is a member of the National Association for Music Education, the American Choral Directors Association, the National Voice Foundation and the American Organization of Kodaly Educators. She received her Master of Music degree and her Ph.D. in Curriculum and Instruction in Music Education degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and her Bachelor of Arts degree from Luther College. Her mentors include Judy Hanson, Brett Goad, Gerald Olson and Weston Noble.

Professor and Coordinator of Choral Activities

Eric A. Johnson, D.M.A., is the director of choral activities at Northern Illinois University and the founding artistic director of Cor Cantiamo. As a 2019 National Endowment for the Arts Artworks grant recipient, he has been recognized for his artistic leadership, whose ensembles represent “choral artistry at its finest” (Lauridsen). He is a committed champion of contemporary choral music and dedicated to addressing social justice issues through interdisciplinary concert events. Johnson is the 2020 recipient of the Harold Decker Award, given by the Illinois American Choral Directors Association to celebrate his career of quality leadership and service to the art of choral music.

Ensembles under his direction have performed at multiple national and division conventions for the National Collegiate Choral Organization, American Choral Directors Association and the Music Educators National Conference. He has served as a guest conductor at Avery Fisher Hall and the David Geffen Hall; Lincoln Center, toured internationally and prepared choruses for collaborations with professional orchestras.

Internationally, Johnson has served as a guest conductor of the Clare College Chapel Choir (Cambridge, England) and the Asian Pacific Activities Conference Choral Festival (Guangzhou, China); taught at Makumira University (Arusha, Tanzania); the Universidade do Estado do Rio Grande do Norte (Natal, Brazil); and directed guest choral residencies at Canterbury and Worcester Cathedrals.

As the artistic director of Cor Cantiamo, Johnson has recorded commercial CDs released on the Divine Arts and Centaur Records labels. He has collaborated with many leading composers of our time including Dominick DiOrio, Stacey Gibbs, Libby Larsen, Morten Lauridsen, Jaakko Mäntyjärvi, Timothy C. Takach, Sir John Tavener and James Whitbourn.

Johnson has published music with Santa Barbara Music Publishing, served as a music editor for Earthsongs Publications and has published articles in the Choral Journal. He is active nationally as a clinician and guest conductor for high school and collegiate honor choirs and regularly conducts choral/orchestral masterworks works with both collegiate and professional ensembles.

Tickets

Tickets for School of Music concerts are available online only. There are prices for adults, seniors, faculty and staff and non-NIU students. NIU students are admitted free of charge to all performances with pre-reserved tickets. Most recitals are not ticketed.

Programs

Livestream

Most NIU concerts and recitals are available to watch on our livestream.

Upcoming Events

The NIU College of Visual and Performing arts puts on more than 200 live performances and exhibitions every year. See what’s coming up next in the School of Music, School of Art and Design, School of Theatre and Dance and the NIU Art Museum.

April 21 – NIU Chamber Choir

April 21 – NIU Chamber Choir

Concert Program

Large Ensemble Concert Series

NIU Chamber Choir

Bach, BWV 21 Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis

Eric Johnson, director,

Tuesday, April 21, 2026
7 p.m.
Boutell Memorial Concert Hall

 

Program

Nature’s Wonders  
Frühzeitiger Frühling  (from 6 Lieder, Op. 59: No. 2) Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)
Aftonen  Hugo Alfvén (1872-1960)
Butterfly Mia Makaroff (b.1970)
Harpsichord Dedication  
Sarabande and Chaconne in D minor
Louis Couperin (1626-1661)
Prelude and Fugue in C minor BWV 871 J.S. Bach (1685-1750)

Hyunah Lee, harpsichord

 

J.S. Bach BWV Cantata BWV 21
Ich hatte viel Bekümmenris
1. Sinfonia
2. Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis (Chorus)
3. Seufzer, Tränen, Kummer, Not (Aria)
Kayla Lockhart, Soprano
4. Wie hast du dich, mein Gott (Recitative)
5. Bäche von gesalznen Zähren (Aria)
Joseph Quaynor, Tenor
6. Was betrübst du dich, meine Seele (Chorus)
7. Nach der Predigt (Recitative Dialogue)
8. Komm mein Jesu, (Aria Duet)
Kayla Lockhart, Soprano Daniel Chukwunyem, Bass
9. Sei nun wieder zufrieden (Chorus)
10. Erfreue dich Seele, erfreue dich Herze (Aria)
Joseph Quaynor, Tenor
11. Das Lamm, das erwürget ist (Chorus)

Chamber Choir Roster

Soprano
Kayla Lockhart
Kayti Miller
Maia Orlovsky

Alto
Maggie Garner
Jessica Holtz
Isabella Froh
Annalee Kalbfleisch

Tenor
Matthew Ellis
EmVi Legaspi
Joseph Quaynor
Segun Owele
Serge Dulong

Bass
Daniel Chukwunyem
Eli Clark
Lucas Smardo
Erik Vazques

Bach BWV 21 Instrumentalists  
Yuxi Qui,  Harpsichord Carly Jackson, Oboe
Athina Vrettou, Violin Charles Shilhavy, Bassoon
Jordan Weiss, Violin Matthew Harvey, Trumpet
Trevor Bitner, Viola   Christian Barraza, Trumpet
Renee Edson, Cello       Julian Suarez, Trumpet
    Connor Butler, Timpani

 

 

Translations

Frühzeitiger Frühling, Felix Mendelssohn

Days of joy,
Have you come so soon?
To give me the sun,
Hill and Forest?

Amply flow
the brooklets again,
Are those meadows?
Is this a valley?

Under the greenery’s
Blooming, thriving effort
The little bees dine,
Humming, on nectar.
Colorful plumage
Rustles in the grove,
Heavenly songs
Resound therein!

Powerfully stirs
a breath of air,
Yet it loses
itself in a bush.

But to the bosom
It turns back,
Help [me], o Muses,
To bear [this] happiness!

Gentle movements
shake in the fresh air,
the lovely stirring
Of sleepy fragrance.
Tell me how, since yesterday,
it happened to me,
lovely sisters –
My sweetheart is there!

 

BWV 21, Bach

2. Chorus (SATB)
Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis in meinem Herzen;
I had much affliction in my heart,
aber deine Tröstungen erquicken meine Seele.
but your consolations restore my soul.

 3. Aria (Soprano)
Seufzer, Tränen, Kummer, Not,
Sighs, tears, grief, distress
Ängstlichs Sehnen, Furcht und Tod
anxious longing, fear and death
Nagen mein beklemmtes Herz,
gnaw at/prey upon my oppressed heart
Ich empfinde Jammer, Schmerz.
I feel misery, pain.

4. Recitative (Tenor)
Wie hast du dich, mein Gott,
Why have you, my God,
In meiner Not,
in my distress
In meiner Furcht und Zagen
in my fear and trepidation
Denn ganz von mir gewandt?
quite turned away from me?
Ach! kennst du nicht dein Kind?
Ah! do you not know your child?
Ach! hörst du nicht das Klagen
Ah! do you not hear the lamentation
Von denen, die dir sind
of those who are to you
Mit Bund und Treu verwandt?
related by covenant and faith?
Du warest meine Lust
You were my joy
Und bist mir grausam worden;
and have become cruel to me
Ich suche dich an allen Orten,
I look for you in all places
Ich ruf und schrei dir nach,
I call and cry out to you,
Allein mein Weh und Ach!
only my ‘woe and alas!’
Scheint itzt, als sei es dir ganz unbewußt.
seem now to be quite unnoticed by you.

5. Aria (Tenor)
Bäche von gesalznen Zähren,
Streams of salty tears,
Fluten rauschen stets einher.
floods rush always along.
Sturm und Wellen mich versehren,
Storm and waves harm me
Und dies trübsalsvolle Meer
and this sea full of sorrows
Will mir Geist und Leben schwächen,
wants to weaken my spirit and life.
Mast und Anker wollen brechen,
Mast and anchor are about to break,
Hier versink ich in den Grund,
Here I sink into the ground,
Dort seh ins der Hölle Schlund.
there I look into the abyss of Hell.

6. Chorus (SATB)
Was betrübst du dich, meine Seele,
Why are you distressed, my soul,
und bist so unruhig in mir?
and are so restless in me?
Harre auf Gott; denn ich werde ihm noch danken,
Wait on God; for I shall yet thank him
daß er meines Angesichtes Hilfe und mein Gott ist.
that I shall see him as my help and my God.

7. Recitative Dialogue
Soprano (Soul):
Ach Jesu, meine Ruh,
Ah Jesus, my inner peace,
Mein Licht, wo bleibest du?
my light, where do you stay?

Bass (Jesus):
O Seele sieh! Ich bin bei dir.
Oh soul, see! I am with you.

Soprano (Soul):
Bei mir?
With me ?
Hier ist ja lauter Nacht.
Here is only night

Bass (Jesus):
Ich bin dein treuer Freund,
I am your faithful friend
Der auch im Dunkeln wacht,
who watches also in darkness
Wo lauter Schalken seind.
where only rogues are.

Soprano (Soul):
Brich doch mit deinem Glanz und Licht des Trostes ein.
Break through then with your splendor and light of comfort.

Bass (Jesus):
Die Stunde kömmet schon,
The hour comes already,
Da deines Kampfes Kron’
since the crown of your struggle
Dir wird ein süßes Labsal sein.
will be a sweet refreshment for you.

8.Aria Duet  
Soprano (Soul)
Komm, mein Jesu, und erquicke,
Come, my Jesus, and restore
Und erfreu mit deinem Blicke. 
And rejoice with your look
Diese Seele,
This Soul
Die soll sterben,
That must die
Und nicht leben
And not live
Und in ihrer Unglückshöle
And in its den of misfortune
Ganz verderben.
Wholly perish.
Ich muss stets in Kummer schweben,
I must always hover in misery
Ja, ach ja, ich bin verloren!
Yes, oh yes, I am lost!
Nein, ach nein, du hassest mich!
No, oh no, you hate me!
Ach, Jesu, durchsüsse mir Seele und Herze,
Jesus, sweeten my soul and heart
Komm mein Jesu, und erquicke
Come, Jesus, and restore
Mit deine, Gnadenblicke!
With your look of grace.                                                                  
Bass (Jesus)
Ja, ich komme und erquicke
Yes, I come and restore
Dich mit meinem Gnadenblicker,
 you with my look of grace,
Deine Seele,
Your soul
Die soll leben,
that must live
Und nicht sterben
and not die
Hier aus dieser wunden Höhle
here from this den of wounds
Sollst du erben
You shall be given
Heil! durch diesen Saft der Reben
Salvation! Through this juice of the grape
Nein, ach nein, du bist erkoren!
No, oh no, you are chosen!
Ja, ach ja, ich liebe dich!
Yes, oh yes, I love you!
Entweichet, ihr Sorgen, verschwinde,
Give way, worries, vanish, pain!
Ja, ich komme und erquicke
Yes, I come and restore
Dich mit meinem Gnadenblicke
You with my look of grace.

9. Chorus
Sei nun wieder zufrieden, meine Seele, denn der Herr tut dir Guts
Be satisfied again now, my soul, for the Lord does good to you.

Tenor:
Was helfen uns die schweren Sorgen,
What help to us are heavy sorrows
Was hilft uns unser Weh und Ach?
What help to us are our ‘woe’ and ‘alas’?
Was hilft es, daß wir alle Morgen
What does it help, that we every morning
Beseufzen unser Ungemach?
sigh over our troubles?
Wir machen unser Kreuz und Leid
We make our cross and suffering
Nur größer durch die Traurigkeit.
only greater through sadness.

Soprano:
Denk nicht in deiner Drangsalshitze,
Do not think in the heat of your distress
Daß du von Gott verlassen seist,
that you have been abandoned by God
Und daß Gott der im Schoße sitze,
and that that man sits in God’s bosom
Der sich mit stetem Glücke speist.
who always feeds on good fortune.
Die folgend Zeit verändert viel
The course of time changes many things
Und setzet jeglichem sein Ziel.
and appoints his end to everything.

 10. Aria (Tenor)
Erfreue dich, Seele, erfreue dich, Herze,
Rejoice, my soul, rejoice, my heart,
Entweiche nun, Kummer, verschwinde, du Schmerze!
Give way, cares, vanish, pain!
Verwandle dich, Weinen, in lauteren Wein,
Change, weeping and whining, into pure wine
Es wird nun mein Ächzen ein Jauchzen mir sein!
Now my lamentation will become exaltation!
Es brennet und sammet die reineste Kerze
Now there burns and flames the purest candle
Der Liebe, des Trostes in Seele und Brust,
of love and consolation in my soul and breast
Weil Jesus mich tröstet mit himmlischer Lust.
since Jesus consoles me with heavenly joy.

 11. Chorus (SATB)
Das Lamm, das erwürget ist, ist würdig zu nehmen
The lamb that was slain is worthy to receive
Kraft und Reichtum und Weisheit und Stärke und Ehre und Preis und Lob.
power and riches and wisdom and strength and honor and praise and glory.
Lob und Ehre und Preis und Gewalt sei unserm Gott von Ewigkeit zu Ewigkeit. Amen, Alleluja!
Glory and honor and praise and power be to our God for ever and ever. Amen. Alleluia!

Bio

Eric A. Johnson, D.M.A. is the Director of Choral Activities at Northern Illinois University (NIU) and founding Artistic Director of Cor Cantiamo (2009-2025). As a National Endowment for the Arts Artworks grant recipient, he has been recognized for his artistic leadership, whose ensembles represent “choral artistry at its finest.” (Lauridsen). He is a committed champion of contemporary choral music and dedicated to addressing social justice issues through interdisciplinary concert events.

Ensembles under his direction have performed at multiple national and division conventions for the National Collegiate Choral Organization, American Choral Directors Association and the Music Educators National Conference. He has served as a guest conductor at Avery Fisher Hall and the David Geffen Hall; Lincoln Center, New York.

Johnson is the 2020 the Harold Decker Award recipient, awarded by the Illinois American Choral Director Association. This honor is given “in recognition of the significant contribution made to the lives of innumerable choral singers, conductors, and audiences who have been privileged to experience the finest in choral music as presented under his direction” (IL-ACDA).

Internationally, Johnson was the Artistic Director of Festival of Three, an international choral festival presented in Latvia, Estonia and Finland, and featured a world premiere commission by Estonian composer Pärt Uusberg.  Johnson has served as a guest conductor of the Clare College Chapel Choir (Cambridge, England) and the Asian Pacific Activities Conference Choral Festival (Guangzhou, China); taught at Makumira University (Arusha, Tanzania); the Universidade do Estado do Rio Grande do Norte (Natal, Brazil); and directed guest choral residencies at Canterbury, Exeter, and Worcester Cathedrals. As the Artistic Director of Cor Cantiamo, Johnson has recorded commercial CDs released on Centaur Records and the Divine Arts record labels. He has collaborated with many leading composers of our time including Dominick DiOrio, Stacey Gibbs, Libby Larsen, Morten Lauridsen, Jaakko Mäntyjärvi, Timothy C. Takach, Sir John Tavener, Pärt Uusberg, and James Whitbourn. Johnson has published music with Santa Barbara Music Publishing, served as a music editor for Earthsongs Publications and has published articles in the Choral Journal. He is active nationally as a clinician and guest conductor for high school and collegiate honor choirs and regularly conducts choral/orchestral masterworks works with both collegiate and professional ensembles.

Tickets

Tickets for School of Music concerts are available online only. There are prices for adults, seniors, faculty and staff and non-NIU students. NIU students are admitted free of charge to all performances with pre-reserved tickets. Most recitals are not ticketed.

Programs

Livestream

Most NIU concerts and recitals are available to watch on our livestream.

Upcoming Events

The NIU College of Visual and Performing arts puts on more than 200 live performances and exhibitions every year. See what’s coming up next in the School of Music, School of Art and Design, School of Theatre and Dance and the NIU Art Museum.

March 3 – NIU Choral Concert

March 3 – NIU Choral Concert

Large Ensemble Concert Series

NIU Choral Concert

NIU Concert Choir
NIU University Chorus
NIU Chamber Choir

Eric Johnson, director, NIU Chamber Choir and Concert Choir
Mary Lynn Doherty, director, University Chorus

Tuesday, March 3, 2025
7 p.m.
Boutell Memorial Concert Hall

Concert Program

Program

Chamber Choir

Sechs Lieder, Op. 50
Ruhethal (no. 5)
Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)
Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis, BWV 21
Chorus no. 6 Was betrübst du dich, meine seele?
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)

University Chorus

Tshotsholoza (Go Forward) Traditional South African
arr. by Jeffrey Ames (b. 1969)
Brayden Dulen and Reign Bonnewell, soloists
Adoramus Te Michael Praetorius (1571-1621)
J’Entends le Moulin (I Hear the Millwheel) Québecois Folk Song
arr. by Donald Patriquin (b. 1938)
From Trois chansons folklorique
The Bird’s Lullaby Sarah Quartel (b. 1982)

Concert Choir

 
Mass in G Minor Ralp Vaughan Williams (1872-1958)
   Kyrie
   Gloria
 
Come, Sing to the Praise (from opera Christoph Gluck (1714-1787)
Joseph Quaynor, soloist
Mamayog Akun Traditional courting song from Mindano, Philippines
arr. Fabian Obospo (b. 1947)
Bahaari Baarish Shruthi Rajasekar (b. 1996)
Ong-Hye-Ya Folk song from Kkyeong-Sang-Do province, Korea
arr. Hye-Young-Cho (b. 1969)

 

March 3 – NIU Choral Concert

March 3 – NIU Choral Concert

Concert Program

Large Ensemble Concert Series

NIU Choral Concert

NIU Concert Choir
NIU University Chorus
NIU Chamber Choir

Eric Johnson, director, NIU Chamber Choir and Concert Choir
Mary Lynn Doherty, director, University Chorus

Tuesday, March 3, 2025
7 p.m.
Boutell Memorial Concert Hall

 

Program

Chamber Choir

Sechs Lieder, Op. 50 Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)
  Ruhethal (no. 5)
  Translation
When in the final rays of evening
golden mountain clouds rise
like Alpen peaks on high,
I often ask sorrowfully:
Is my own final resting-place
among them?
Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis, BWV 21 Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)
  Chorus no. 2  Ich hatte viel Bekümmernis
  Translation
I had much affliction in my heart,
but your consolations restore my soul.
  Chorus no. 6 Was betrübst du dich, meine seele?
  Translation
Why are you distressed, my soul,
and are so restless in me?
Wait on God; for I shall yet thank him
that I shall see him as my help and my God.

University Chorus

Tshotsholoza (Go Forward) Traditional South African
arr. by Jeffrey Ames (b. 1969)
Brayden Dulen and Reign Bonnewell, Soloists
  Translation
“Go forward, go forward on those mountains;
the train is coming from South Africa.
You are running away on those mountains;
the train is coming from South Africa.”
Adoramus Te Michael Praetorius (1571-1621)
J’Entends le Moulin (I Hear the Millwheel) Québecois Folk Song
arr. by Donald Patriquin (b. 1938)
From Trois chansons folklorique
  Translation
I hear the millwheel tique tique taque.
My father is having a house built.
It’s being built with three gables.
There are three carpenters building it.
The youngest is my darling.
What do you have in your apron?
lt’s a pie made of three pigeons.
Let’s sit down and eat it.
While sitting down they all lept up,
Causing the sea and fish to tremble,
and the stones on the bottom of the sea.
The Bird’s Lullaby Sarah Quartel (b. 1982)

 

 

Concert Choir

Mass in G Minor Ralp Vaughan Williams (1872-1958)
    Translation
  Kyrie  
    Lord have mercy on us.
Christ have mercy in us.
Lord have mercy on us
  Gloria  
   

Glory to God in the highest.
And on earth peace,
To all those of goodwill.

We praise Thee. We bless Thee.
We worship Thee. We glorify Thee.

We Give thanks to Thee, according to thy great glory.

Lord God, heavenly King, God, Father almighty.
Lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son.
Lord God, Lamb of God, Son of the Father.

Thou who takest away the sins of the world,
Have mercy upon us.
Thou who takest away the sins of the world,
Receive our prayer.
Thou who sittest at the right hand of God the Father,
Have mercy on us.

For thou alone are holy.
Thou alone are the Lord.
Thou alone are the most high, Jesus Christ.

With the Holy Spirit
In the glory of God the Father. Amen.

Come, Sing to the Praise (from opera Christoph Gluck (1714-1787)
Joseph Quaynor, soloist
Mamayog Akun Traditional courting song from Mindano, Philippines
ar. Fabian Obospo (b. 1947)
  Translation
My dear Mamayog, do walk behind me
Because if you walk in front of me,
People will only look as you even though I am as
Pretty as you.
Bahaari Baarish Shruthi Rajasekar (b. 1996)
Ong-Hye-Ya Folk song from Kyeong-Sang-Do province, Korea
arr. Hye-Young-Cho (b. 1969)
 

Translation
Ong-hye-ya (You’re doing a great job)
Over the embankment, a quail is laying an egg in the barley field.
Plant barley in October, it sprouts in December,
Blooms in February and March, process in April and May.
When the process is over, all the village will celebrate with their servants.
Front of the house Guhm-Suhn and back of the house Bok-Suhn meet each other talking, whispering.

Personnel

NIU Chamber Choir

Director: Eric A. Johnson, D.M.A.
Yuxi Qui, Accompanist
Soprano Alto Tenor Bass

Kayla Lockhart
Kayti Miller
Maia Orlovsky

Maggie Garner
Jessica Holtz
Isabella Froh
Annalee Kalbfleisch

Matthew Ellis
EmVi Legaspi
Joseph Quaynor
Segun Owele
Serge Dulong

Daniel Chukwunyem
Eli Clark
Lucas Smardo
Erik Vazques 

NIU Concert Choir 

Director: Eric A. Johnson, D.M.A.
Minjung Kim, Accompanist

Soprano Tenor Alto Bass

Kaylie Emmer
Maggie Garner
Lyric Johnson
Emily Kmetz
Maia Orlovsky
Chenoa Randolph
Kyla Reisenbichler
Willow Sabani
Thalila Sisou
Niya Teague
Olivia Yedinak


Rain Anzaldua
Amelia Arndt
Lexus Bovensiep
Isabella Froh
Sondos Hassan
Jessica Holtz
Kayti Miller
Katie Vidmar
Chloe Weeks

Serge Dulang
Matthew Ellis
Gabriel Galindo
Eduardo Garcia
Jacob Lawver
EmVi Legaspi
Joseph Quaynor
A.J. Villa

Bryn Callahan
Eli Clarke
Gunnar Magnuson
Angel Morales
Emerson Valyou
Nolan Valyou
Erik Vazquez

 

NIU University Chorus

Director: Mary Lynn Doherty, Ph.D.
Qingyun Zheng, Accompanist

Soprano Alto Tenor Bass
Emily Bauer
Jenessa Bowen
Vanessa Carol
Araceli Duran
Dani Godinez
Skyla Johnson
Hannah Jorgensen
Jocelyn Kuntz
G Mayotte
Chloe McKendry
Lux Moone
Dulce Nepomuceno
Emelia Plewa
Sheridan Settipani
Brooke Sleigher
Caileen Szostak
Anne Bishop
Talia Grzelak
Isabella Jaimes
Alisa James
Ash Lehning
Lily Owen
Gracie Raab
Jayda Thompson
Jaylin Turner
Chris Avila
Reign Bonnewell
Phoenix Brosman
Bryn Callahan
Brayden Dulin
Gabe Greenfield
Alex Hager
Dave Houghton
Madelyn Montiel
Michael Powyszynski
Blake Wiles
Jonathan Alanis
Crowler Bonomo
Declan Carter
Andrew Clark
Colton Dean
Nathan Domecki 
Brennyn Ford
Julian Hernandez
Brady Jobst
Wolfgang Jones
Sasha Marquez
Noah Reader
Lucas Smardo
Morgan Tipton
Frank Vyverberg
Everett Wright

 

Bios

Assistant Director of the School of Music
Associate Professor and Coordinator of Music Education

Mary Lynn Doherty is the assistant director of the School of Music and the coordinator of music education at Northern Illinois University, where she teaches choral and general music methods, supervises student teachers, works with undergraduate and graduate students as well as area music educators at all levels and conducts the University Chorus.

In 2020, Doherty was awarded the Outstanding Mentor Award from the Presidential Commission on the Status of Women. She has also been nominated for NIU’s Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching Award four times, representing the School of Music and the College of Visual and Performing Arts. Doherty has been invited to conduct ILMEA District choirs (elementary, middle and high school) eight times as well as serving as the conductor of the Rockford High School All-City Honor Choir, the Big Northern Conference Honor Choir, the Little Ten High School Choral Festival, the West Suburban Women’s Festival Choir, the North Central Junior Conference Honor Choir, the Women’s Honor Choir at the UW-Madison Summer Youth Music Camp and numerous district festival choirs.

Doherty was the director of NIU’s Community School of the Arts Children’s Choir from 2008-2016, earning grants from the National Endowment for the Arts to fund commissions and residences with internationally renowned composers and conductors. She is on the Illinois Comprehensive Musicianship through Performance Committee and serves as the NIU host of the Summer CMP Workshop. Prior to coming to NIU, she was the director of music education and associate conductor for the Choir Academy of the Chicago Children’s Choir.

Doherty’s research is on vocal health issues experienced by music teachers and she has presented her work both nationally and internationally as well as being published in The Choral Journal and the Journal of Voice. She is a member of the National Association for Music Education, the American Choral Directors Association, the National Voice Foundation and the American Organization of Kodaly Educators. She received her Master of Music degree and her Ph.D. in Curriculum and Instruction in Music Education degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and her Bachelor of Arts degree from Luther College. Her mentors include Judy Hanson, Brett Goad, Gerald Olson and Weston Noble.

Professor and Coordinator of Choral Activities

Eric A. Johnson, D.M.A., is the director of choral activities at Northern Illinois University and the founding artistic director of Cor Cantiamo. As a 2019 National Endowment for the Arts Artworks grant recipient, he has been recognized for his artistic leadership, whose ensembles represent “choral artistry at its finest” (Lauridsen). He is a committed champion of contemporary choral music and dedicated to addressing social justice issues through interdisciplinary concert events. Johnson is the 2020 recipient of the Harold Decker Award, given by the Illinois American Choral Directors Association to celebrate his career of quality leadership and service to the art of choral music.

Ensembles under his direction have performed at multiple national and division conventions for the National Collegiate Choral Organization, American Choral Directors Association and the Music Educators National Conference. He has served as a guest conductor at Avery Fisher Hall and the David Geffen Hall; Lincoln Center, toured internationally and prepared choruses for collaborations with professional orchestras.

Internationally, Johnson has served as a guest conductor of the Clare College Chapel Choir (Cambridge, England) and the Asian Pacific Activities Conference Choral Festival (Guangzhou, China); taught at Makumira University (Arusha, Tanzania); the Universidade do Estado do Rio Grande do Norte (Natal, Brazil); and directed guest choral residencies at Canterbury and Worcester Cathedrals.

As the artistic director of Cor Cantiamo, Johnson has recorded commercial CDs released on the Divine Arts and Centaur Records labels. He has collaborated with many leading composers of our time including Dominick DiOrio, Stacey Gibbs, Libby Larsen, Morten Lauridsen, Jaakko Mäntyjärvi, Timothy C. Takach, Sir John Tavener and James Whitbourn.

Johnson has published music with Santa Barbara Music Publishing, served as a music editor for Earthsongs Publications and has published articles in the Choral Journal. He is active nationally as a clinician and guest conductor for high school and collegiate honor choirs and regularly conducts choral/orchestral masterworks works with both collegiate and professional ensembles.

Tickets

Tickets for School of Music concerts are available online only. There are prices for adults, seniors, faculty and staff and non-NIU students. NIU students are admitted free of charge to all performances with pre-reserved tickets. Most recitals are not ticketed.

Programs

Livestream

Most NIU concerts and recitals are available to watch on our livestream.

Upcoming Events

The NIU College of Visual and Performing arts puts on more than 200 live performances and exhibitions every year. See what’s coming up next in the School of Music, School of Art and Design, School of Theatre and Dance and the NIU Art Museum.

Dec. 7 – 27th Annual Holiday Concert

Dec. 7 – 27th Annual Holiday Concert

Concert Program

Large Ensemble Concert Series

27th Annual Holiday Concert

NIU Concert Choir
NIU Chamber Choir
NIU University Chorus
Brass Ensemble
DeKalb Festival Chorus

Eric Johnson, director, NIU Chamber Choir and Concert Choir
Mary Lynn Doherty, director, University Chorus
Paul Marchese, director, DeKalb Festival Chorus

Sunday, December 7, 2025
3 p.m.
Boutell Memorial Concert Hall

 

Program

Before concert music from 2:35 – 2:55 p.m.  Brennyn Ford, piano
Processional
Personent Hodie (On this Day, Earth Shall Ring!)
Anon.
arr. Lara Hoggard (1915-2007)
Concert Choir and University Chorus
Instrumental Ensemble
Matthew Harvey, Issac Lopez, Julian Henderson, Willow Connelly, trumpet
Jacob Morgan, John Wolff, percussion
MinJung Kim, organ
Translation:
Let youthful voices resound today, joyfully praising Him who is born for us, who is given
unto us by the most high God, and brought forth from a virgin.
He is born in the world, is wrapped in swaddling cloths and placed in a manger in a s
table of beasts. He is ruler over all things.
Three wise men come, bearing gifts. They have found the Child by following a little star.
Adoring the Lord, they offer him gold, incense and myrrh.
Let all young choristers now sing as did the angels, praising him who has come into all t
he world: “Glory to God in the Highest!”

Concert Choir

 
In Dulci Jubilo 14th Century Carol
arr. Carl Thiel (1861-1939)
Translation:
In dulci jubilo
Let us our homage show
Our heart’s joy reclineth
In praesepio
And like a bright star shineth
Matris in gremio
Alpha es et O.

 

O Jesu parvule
I yearn for thee alway
Listen to my ditty
O puer optima
Have pity on me, pity
O princeps gloriae,
Trahe me post te.

Ubi sunt gaudia
If that they be not there
There are angels singing
Nova cantica
There the bells are ringing
In regis curia
O that we were there.

KaĨínka (The Snowball Tree) Russian folksong
arr. Vadim Prokhorov (b. 1946)

Ziming Yan, piano

Translation:
Kalinka, kalinka, kalinka, my sweet, beauty-berry, in the garden, malinka, my sweet. Ah!
“Neath a pine tree, ‘neath an evergreen tree, lay me down, so I can sleep.
Liuli, liuli, liuli, liuli, lay me down, so I can sleep.
Kalinka, kalinka, kalinka, my sweet, beauty-berry, in the garden, malinka, my sweet. Ah!
Ah, you pine tree, ah, you evergreen tree, do not rustle o’er my head.
Liuli, liuli, liuli, liuli, do not rustle o’er my head.
Kalinka, kalinka, kalinka, my sweet, beauty-berry, in the garden, malinka, my sweet. Ah!
Ah, my darling, my darling maiden, will you give your love to me?
Liuli, liuli, liuli, liuli, will you give your love to me?
Kalinka, kalinka, kalinka, my sweet, beauty-berry, in the garden, malinka, my sweet. Ah!

Chamber Choir

 
Jul, jul, strålande jul Gustav Nordqvist (1886-1949)
Translation:
Christmas, Christmas, glorious Christmas: shine over white forests,
heavenly crowns with sparkling lights,
glimmering arcs in the houses of God,
hymns that are sung throughout the ages,
eternal longing for light and peace!
Christmas, Christmas, glorious Christmas, shine over white forests!

 

Come, come, blessed Christmas: lower your white wings,
over the battlefield’s blood and cry,
over the breaths from the bosoms of men,
over the loved ones who’ve gone to their rest,
over the daybreak of newborn life!
Come, come, blessed Christmas: lower your white wings!

Brass Ensemble

 
Maoz Tsur J. Mombach (1813-1880)
arr. Todd Marchand

Matthew Harvey, trumpet 1
Isaac Lopez, trumpet 2
Les Stark, horn
Zaire Burks, trombone
Zach Cooper, tuba

DeKalb Festival Chorus

 
The Lamb John Tavener (1944-2013)
Beteleheumu Traditional Yoruba song
arr. Olatunji and Wendell Whalum
Translation:
We are glad that we have a Father to trust.
We are glad that we have a Father to rely upon.
Where was Jesus born?
Where was He born?
Bethlehem, the city of wonder.
That it where the Father was born for sure.
Praise, praise, praise be to Him.
We thank Thee, we thank Thee, we thank Thee for this day,
Gracious Father.
Praise, praise, praise be to Thee,
Merciful Father.

University Chorus

 
A La Nanita Nana (A Little Lullaby) Jóse Ramón Gomis (1856-1939)
arr. Patty Garshore (b. 1947)
Nathan Stade, guitar
Translation:
Come, let’s sing a little lullaby, Come, let’s sing a little,
My Jesus is sleepy. Blessed be, blessed be.
Little spring that runs clear & sonorous,
Nightingale that in the forest, weeps as it sings.
Hush, while the cradle rocks to and fro.
Come, let’s sing a little lullaby.

Chamber Choir

 
Tomorrow Shall Be My Dancing Day Traditional English Carol
arr. David Willcocks (1919-2015)
The Everlasting Flame Yoni Fogelman (b. 2002)

Rachel Yasutake, graduate conducting student
Yuxi Qui, piano

Translation:
Blessed are you, Lord our God
King of the Universe,
Who has sanctified us with His commandments,
And commanded us kindle the Chanukah light.
Happy Chanukah!
Bogoróditse Djévo Arvo Pärt (b. 1935)
Translation:
Rejoice, O Virgin,
Mary full of grace, the Lord is with Thee.
Blessed art Thou among women,
and blessed is the fruit of Thy womb,
for Thou hast borne the Savior of our souls.

Brass Ensemble

 
Christmas Crackers
Jingle Bells-Deck the Halls
We Wish You a Merry Christmas
arr. John Iveson

Matthew Harvey, trumpet 1
Isaac Lopez, trumpet 2
Les Stark, horn
Zaire Burks, trombone
Zach Cooper, tuba

Concert Choir

 
O Nata Lux Guy Forbes
Translation:
O Light born of Light,
Jesus, redeemer to all eternity,
with loving-kindness deign to receive
suppliant praise and prayer.

 

Thou who once deigned to be clothed in flesh
for the sake of the lost,
grant us to be members
of thy blessed body.

Oba Tide Traditional Nigerian
arr. Jeffrey L. Ames

Jacob Morgan, John Wolff; percussion

Translation:
Here comes the King,
Jesus is born.
Glory be to God in the highest,
Jesus is born.
Magnificat Donald Fraser

Dedicated to honor the life and memory of Dee Erickson Slawson,
A co-founding member of Heartland voices,
and wife of the Artistic Director John G. Slawson.

 Texts taken from the traditional Magnificat and adaptations from The Slumbering Song by Alfred Noyes.

Eduardo Zamudio, clarinet
Jacob Seabrook, viola
MinJung Kim, piano

Translation:
My soul doth magnify the Lord.
and my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour.
Because he hath regarded the humility of his handmaid:
for behold from henceforth all generations shall call me blessed.
Because he that is mighty hath done great things to me: and holy is his name.
And his mercy is from generation unto generations, to them that fear him.
He hath shewed strength with his arm:
he hath scattered the proud in the conceit of their heart.
He hath put down the mighty from their seat and hath exalted the humble.
He hath filled the hungry with good things: and the rich he hath sent empty away.
He hath received Israel his servant, being mindful of his mercy.
As he spoke to our fathers: to Abraham and to his seed forever.
Piano Interlude Minjung Kim

Combined Choirs

 
IV. Gloria in Excelsis (from LUX) Dan Forrest (b. 1978)

Matthew Harvey, trumpet 1
Isaac Lopez, trumpet 2
Les Stark, horn
Zaire Burks, trombone
Zach Cooper, tuba
Jacob Morgan, John Wolff, percussion
MinJung Kim, piano

Translation:
Glory to God in the Highest and on earth peace to all of goodwill.

 

Personnel

NIU University Chorus

Ziming Yan, Accompanist

Soprano
Emily Bauer
Vicky Gonzalez
Skyla Johnson
Giavanna Mayotte
Lux Moore
Brooke Sleigher
Katie Vidmar
Alto
Anne Bishop
Rashunda Dorset-Headley
Talia Grzelak
Isabella Jaimes
Gracie Raab
Meghan Rault
Jayda Thompson
Tenor
Jonathan Arroyo
Mason Brooks
Bryn Callahan
Jalen Charles
Brayden Dulin
Alex Hager
Sean Hamilton
Yari Taylor
Bass
Christian Barraza
Aidan Boyer
Colton Dean
Quinten Force
Brennyn Ford
Gabe Greenfield
Angel Morales
Hunter Otgontseren
Everett Wright
NIU Concert Choir 

MinJung Kim, Accompanist

Soprano
Mikayla Ahren
Kaylie Emmer
Maggie Garner
Emily Kmetz
Maia Orlovsky
Chenoa Randolph
Kyla Reisenbichler
Willow Sabani
Thalila Sisou
Olivia Yedinak
Kaleigh Wicknick
Alto
Rain Anzaldua
Amelia Arndt
Lexus Bovensiep
Sarah Calgaro
Sondos Hassan
Jessic Holtz
Lyric Johnson
Jazmine Link
Kayti Miller
Allison Wilson
Chloe Weeks
Tenor
Serge Dulang
Matthew Ellis
Jake Foland
Eduardo Garcia
Jacob Lawver
EmVi Legaspi
Joseph Quaynor
A.J. Villa
Bass
Eli Clarke
Georgi Dimitrov
Bradley Kuhn
Gunnar Magnuson
Lucas Smardo
Emerson Valyou
Nolan Valyou
Erik Vazquez
NIU Chamber Choir

Yuxi Qui, Accompanist
Soprano
Kayla Lockhart
Rachel Yasutaki
Emily Kmetz
Maia Orlovsky
Alto
Sarah Calgaro
Isabella Froh
Kayti Miller
Allison Wilson
Tenor
Matthew Ellis
EmVi Legaspi
Joseph Quaynor
Matthew Skirmont
Bass
Daniel Chukwunyem
Eli Clark
Georgie Dimitrov
Lucas Smardo
DeKalb Festival Chorus
Soprano
Isabella Anderson
Deneen Dale
Amanda Durik
Rose Ebert
Katie Grogan
Mandy Grogan
Beverly Heaney
Abi Mogge
Sue Morgan
Freyja Rasmussen-Johns
Janet Rowat Kraiss
Peggy Safford
Erika Schlichter
Moni Sommer
Rachel Streufert
Jan Vander Meer*
Alto
Nathalia Anderson
Jessi Baird
Cyndy Baumgart
Karen Beckley
Dawn Bonak
Breonna Carson
Allison Dunnagan
Molly Fischer
Lynn Fisher McCanne
Teresa Fuller
Maria Fuscone
Julie Gommel Bailey
Talia Grzelak
Susan Hammack
Sumiko Keay
Eva Marchese
Elizabeth Mascal
Margaret Page
Gracie Raab
Ann Tucker
Kim Wheaton
Barb White
Tenor
Joe Baumgart
Michael Carlson
Norden Gilbert
Dennis Heaney
Laurie Miller
Brent Monteiro
Chris Stoughton
Sean Walters
Bass
Bob Abel
Tim Bostwick
Jeff Little
Daniel Maciel
Joseph Marchese
Larry Morgan
Jon Olson
Ed Safford
Gary Vander Meer

Bios

Assistant Director of the School of Music
Professor and Coordinator of Music Education

Mary Lynn Doherty is the assistant director of the School of Music and the coordinator of music education at Northern Illinois University, where she teaches choral and general music methods, supervises student teachers, works with undergraduate and graduate students as well as area music educators at all levels and conducts the University Chorus.

In 2020, Doherty was awarded the Outstanding Mentor Award from the Presidential Commission on the Status of Women. She has also been nominated for NIU’s Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching Award four times, representing the School of Music and the College of Visual and Performing Arts. Doherty has been invited to conduct ILMEA District choirs (elementary, middle and high school) eight times as well as serving as the conductor of the Rockford High School All-City Honor Choir, the Big Northern Conference Honor Choir, the Little Ten High School Choral Festival, the West Suburban Women’s Festival Choir, the North Central Junior Conference Honor Choir, the Women’s Honor Choir at the UW-Madison Summer Youth Music Camp and numerous district festival choirs.

Doherty was the director of NIU’s Community School of the Arts Children’s Choir from 2008-2016, earning grants from the National Endowment for the Arts to fund commissions and residences with internationally renowned composers and conductors. She is on the Illinois Comprehensive Musicianship through Performance Committee and serves as the NIU host of the Summer CMP Workshop. Prior to coming to NIU, she was the director of music education and associate conductor for the Choir Academy of the Chicago Children’s Choir.

Doherty’s research is on vocal health issues experienced by music teachers and she has presented her work both nationally and internationally as well as being published in The Choral Journal and the Journal of Voice. She is a member of the National Association for Music Education, the American Choral Directors Association, the National Voice Foundation and the American Organization of Kodaly Educators. She received her Master of Music degree and her Ph.D. in Curriculum and Instruction in Music Education degree from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and her Bachelor of Arts degree from Luther College. Her mentors include Judy Hanson, Brett Goad, Gerald Olson and Weston Noble.

Professor and Coordinator of Choral Activities

Eric A. Johnson, D.M.A., is the director of choral activities at Northern Illinois University and the founding artistic director of Cor Cantiamo. As a 2019 National Endowment for the Arts Artworks grant recipient, he has been recognized for his artistic leadership, whose ensembles represent “choral artistry at its finest” (Lauridsen). He is a committed champion of contemporary choral music and dedicated to addressing social justice issues through interdisciplinary concert events. Johnson is the 2020 recipient of the Harold Decker Award, given by the Illinois American Choral Directors Association to celebrate his career of quality leadership and service to the art of choral music.

Ensembles under his direction have performed at multiple national and division conventions for the National Collegiate Choral Organization, American Choral Directors Association and the Music Educators National Conference. He has served as a guest conductor at Avery Fisher Hall and the David Geffen Hall; Lincoln Center, toured internationally and prepared choruses for collaborations with professional orchestras.

Internationally, Johnson has served as a guest conductor of the Clare College Chapel Choir (Cambridge, England) and the Asian Pacific Activities Conference Choral Festival (Guangzhou, China); taught at Makumira University (Arusha, Tanzania); the Universidade do Estado do Rio Grande do Norte (Natal, Brazil); and directed guest choral residencies at Canterbury and Worcester Cathedrals.

As the artistic director of Cor Cantiamo, Johnson has recorded commercial CDs released on the Divine Arts and Centaur Records labels. He has collaborated with many leading composers of our time including Dominick DiOrio, Stacey Gibbs, Libby Larsen, Morten Lauridsen, Jaakko Mäntyjärvi, Timothy C. Takach, Sir John Tavener and James Whitbourn.

Johnson has published music with Santa Barbara Music Publishing, served as a music editor for Earthsongs Publications and has published articles in the Choral Journal. He is active nationally as a clinician and guest conductor for high school and collegiate honor choirs and regularly conducts choral/orchestral masterworks works with both collegiate and professional ensembles.

Tickets

Tickets for School of Music concerts are available online only. There are prices for adults, seniors, faculty and staff and non-NIU students. NIU students are admitted free of charge to all performances with pre-reserved tickets. Most recitals are not ticketed.

Programs

Livestream

Most NIU concerts and recitals are available to watch on our livestream.

Upcoming Events

The NIU College of Visual and Performing arts puts on more than 200 live performances and exhibitions every year. See what’s coming up next in the School of Music, School of Art and Design, School of Theatre and Dance and the NIU Art Museum.

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